FDA Approves Imfinzi for Locally Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

FDA approves first treatment approved for stage 3 unresectable non-small cell lung cancer to reduce the risk of the cancer progressing, when the cancer has not worsened after chemoradiation.

BY Jason M. Broderick

PUBLISHED February 17, 2018

The FDA has approved Imfinzi (durvalumab) for the treatment of patients with locally advanced, unresectable stage 3 non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who have not progressed following chemoradiotherapy.

“This is the first treatment approved for stage 3 unresectable non-small cell lung cancer to reduce the risk of the cancer progressing, when the cancer has not worsened after chemoradiation,” Richard Pazdur, M.D., director of the FDA’s Oncology Center of Excellence and acting director of the Office of Hematology and Oncology Products in the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, said in a statement.

“For patients with stage 3 lung cancer that cannot be removed surgically, the current approach to prevent progression is chemoradiation. Although a small number of patients may be cured with the chemoradiation, the cancer may eventually progress. Patients now have an approved therapy that has been shown to keep the cancer from progressing for a longer time after chemoradiation,” added Pazdur.

In the PACIFIC trial, which took place at 235 centers in 26 countries, 473 patients were randomized to Imfinzi and 236 were randomized to placebo. PFS was the primary endpoint, along with overall survival (OS). OS data are still immature and were not included in this analysis.

The median age of patients in the study was 64 years, and most were current or former smokers (91 percent). The majority were men (70.1 percent), and most had squamous histology (45.7 percent). Chemotherapy use was similar between groups, with 25.8 percent and 28.7 percent receiving induction chemotherapy before definitive chemoradiotherapy, in the Imfinzi and placebo groups, respectively. Response to chemoradiotherapy was similar between the two arms, with objective response rates (ORR) of 50.6 percent and 49.8 percent, for the PD-L1 and placebo groups, respectively.

The PFS benefit associated with Imfinzi was consistent across all pre-specified subgroups, as defined according to patient demographic characteristics, baseline clinicopathologic features, and response to previous treatment. The PFS benefit held irrespective of PD-L1 expression before chemoradiotherapy.

Objective response rate, as assessed by blinded independent central review, was also significantly higher with Imfinzi (28.4 percent vs 16 percent). Of the patients who had a response to Imfinzi, 72.8 percent had an ongoing response at both 12 and 18 months as compared with 56.1 percent and 46.8 percent, respectively, in the placebo arm.

Just 16.5 percent of patients in the Imfinzi group experienced disease progression compared with 27.7 percent of the placebo group.

Nearly all patients in both groups, 96.8 percent for Imfinzi and 94.9 percent for placebo, experienced adverse events (AEs) of any cause and grade. Grade 3/4 AEs were slightly more common with Imfinzi (29.9 percent vs 26.1 percent). Pneumonia was the most common grade 3/4 AE, and was observed in 4.4 percent of patients in the Imfinzi group and 3.8 percent of patients in the placebo group.

AEs caused discontinuations in 15.4 percent of patients in the Imfinzi group and 9.8 percent of patients in the placebo group. About 29 percent of patients in the Imfinzi group experienced serious AEs compared with 22.6 percent of the placebo arm.

The most frequent AEs leading to discontinuation were pneumonitis or radiation pneumonitis and pneumonia in both groups. One-third of patients assigned to Imfinzi experienced any-grade pneumonitis or radiation pneumonitis compared with 24.8 percent in the placebo group. Grade 3/4 pneumonitis or radiation pneumonitis occurred in 3.4 percent of the Imfinzi group and 2.6 percent of the placebo group. Deaths due to AEs occurred in 4.4 percent of patients in the Imfinzi group and 5.6 percent of patients in the placebo group.